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Renting

I curently have a mortage on a Mobile home. What happens when I can’t pay them anymore?

by Jarad Leave a Comment

Question: I currently have a mortgage on a Mobile home. I also have to pay a lot fee & flood insurance, along with reg. homeowners ins. and everything else, I just can’t do it anymore. The manager of this park doesn’t seem to want to help me with a hardship case. I don’t see a way out. What happens when I can’t pay them anymore?

Answer: – Well, that’s simple. If you can’t pay, then you probably should look for a different spot to park your mobile home or you could look for roommates to help you pay the lot fee if you’re not married or see if there is work you can do on the side (maintenence) for the mobile home park so your lot fee is waved each month.

Filed Under: Renting Tagged With: mobile home

I bought a condo in CA. Should I tell the tenants to move? Do I keep making the 80% payments when the payments increase? Should I keep my property manager? Is this considered “rent skimming”?

by Jarad Leave a Comment

Question: Here is the situation:
I bought a condo in CA and lived in it for 6 mo, moved out and rented it for the last 2 yrs to a couple who cover 80% of my mortgage.I claim it as income property on taxes. My “interest only” loan caps in 2 mo., then payments increase 2 1/2 times the amount I am paying. I cannot afford this. The bank wants me to do a short sale. The house is worth 75,000 less than the loan. I am not in default yet. Here are my questions: Should I tell the tenants to move, if so legally how many days notice? Do I keep making the 80% payments when the payments increase? Should I keep my property manager? He takes 8%. If I keep 2 mo. rent to refund the tenants their deposit is that considered “rent skimming”?
Concerned Landlord

Answer: – Even if you make 80% of the payment, they will initiate foreclosure unless the other 20% is a 2nd mortgage in which they could initiate foreclosure, but will most likely just write it off and 1099 you for the amount they lost. Depending on how many properties you have now and the tenants you have living in your property, you definately want to consider whether or not to use a property manager. Some tenents you never hear from, others are constantly bugging you in which case a property manager is worth every penny. As for rent skimming, here is what it says under California Civil Code 890…

890. (a)

(1) “Rent skimming” means using revenue received from the rental of a parcel of residential real property at any time during the first year period after acquiring that property without first applying the revenue or an equivalent amount to the payments due on all mortgages and deeds of trust encumbering that property.

(2) For purposes of this section, “rent skimming” also means receiving revenue from the rental of a parcel of residential real property where the person receiving that revenue, without the consent of the owner or owner’s agent, asserted possession or ownership of the residential property, whether under a false claim of title, by trespass, or any other unauthorized means, rented the property to another, and collected rents from the other person for the rental of the property. This paragraph does not apply to any tenant, subtenant, lessee, sublessee, or assignee, nor to any other hirer having a lawful occupancy interest in the residential dwelling.

(b) “Multiple acts of rent skimming” means knowingly and willfully rent skimming with respect to each of five or more parcels of residential real property acquired within any two-year period.

(c) “Person” means any natural person, any form of business organization, its officers and directors, and any natural person who authorizes rent skimming or who, being in a position of control, fails to prevent another from rent skimming.

You may want to see if you can resolve this with your tenant and let them know of the situation, at least that way they know what’s going on.

Filed Under: Renting Tagged With: 1099, Foreclosure, landlord, loan, mortgage, rent skimming

who do i pay rent to when the apartment is in foreclosure?

by Jarad Leave a Comment

Question: who do i pay rent to when the apartment is in foreclosure?

Answer: -You’ll have to work that out with your landlord. I personally knowing if the property was in foreclosure would have a difficult time making payments to anyone because they are causing me an inconvenience by moving. If I was renting and knew the property was in foreclosure I would approach the landlord and ask him to sell it to me (that is if I knew I could rent it out or wanted to live there). Then I would ask to take it over “subject to” the existing loan. The loan would stay in his name but he would have to deed the property over to me, that way I control it. Then I’d have to cure the loan and I’d have to be creative in doing so. I’d either use a credit card, family member or lease it to someone else and require a large enough down payment to cure the loan and put $5,000 in my pocket. So now I own a piece of property, I have $5,000 in my pocket and I have no risk. Worse case I walk away with 5K and I have to move which I was going to have to move anyway.

Filed Under: Foreclosure, Renting, Subject To Tagged With: Foreclosure, rent, subject to

Can you legally rent a home to someone knowing your home is in foreclosure

by Jarad 3 Comments

Question: Can you legally rent a home to someone knowing your home is in foreclosure

Answer: -That’s pretty much considered rent skimming, which is illegal. Where you are using the rent money from the rental for personal use and not applying it towards the loan. Maybe you can get away with it if you disclose to the renters that the property is in foreclosure, you’re not planning to make any payments, and they’ll have to move out when the bank forecloses on it. Do a search online for “rent skimming” and you can make your own decision on it. As for me, I’d stay away from it.

Filed Under: Foreclosure, Rent Skimming, Renting Tagged With: Foreclosure, rent, rent skimming

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